The Scarlet Letter, by Nathaniel Hawthorne

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French poet Jean De La Fontaine once said, “Nothing weighs on us so heavily as a secret does.” Set in the harsh Puritan community of seventeenth-century Boston, Nathanial Hawthorne’s The Scarlet Letter is a tale of a woman named Hester Prynne who is involved in an infidelity scandal. As a result she is punished by the relentless society and is ordered to bear a scarlet “A” on her bosom for the remainder of her life which stands for adulterer. However, the mystery as to who the father is of her newborn baby, Pearl would remain a mystery for seven years. One of the town’s most renowned figures, their beloved minister Arthur Dimmesdale proves to be a true exhibit of Mr. Fontaine’s saying since he is the illicit lover of Hester and is Pearl’s father. The pain of his secret within a society of people, who envelop themselves around religion and their clergymen, proves to be too much of a burden for Dimmesdale to handle, so he chooses to keep his sin a secret. Years go by and the minister grows mentally, physically and spiritually weaker as the weight of his sin bears down on him. Yet towards the end of the novel, Dimmesdale overcomes a great change seven years later and conquers his fear of revealing his sin to the public as he experiences God grace the moment he dies. The strain of his sin and the physical symbol of the scarlet letter takes its toll on Dimmesdale as it causes him to change from a well-spoken, powerful minister to an unhealthy, silent man filled with guilt and sadness. By the end however, Dimmesdale realizes that he must reveal his sin to relieve his anguish thus freeing him towards the path of his newfound salvation even in the untimely moment of his death.

Out of all the main characters, Dimmesdale exhibits the grea...

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... the secret he hides to torture him more through the means of his presence or his medicine which could quite possibly be poisonous. Chillingworth constantly questions Dimmesdale about his life, attempting to pry open the secret he hopes the reverend is holding. One day Chillingworth extends his limitations suggesting that Dimmesdale’s disease is a spiritual problem. This offends the minister and claims he will confess to God and not to him. When Dimmesdale goes to sleep shortly after this encounter, Chillingworth opens his shirt only to find a scarlet letter “A”, similar to Hester’s carved on his chest. This tells everything Chillingworth needs to know as he discovers that Dimmesdale is former companion of his former wife, Hester Prynne. Now Chillingworth is capable of torturing Dimmesdale at will without the minister knowing that he has full knowledge of his sin.

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